Elemental
The Forty Acres is home to minerals and gems from all over the world. Here they are like you’ve never seen them.
Photographs by Matt Wright-Steel
Just off of San Jacinto Boulevard, up two sets of long, narrow steps stands the Texas Memorial Museum, a towering white-stone building framed by tall green oaks. Inside, through a thick Art Deco glass door and underneath the 82-year-old building’s lofty, ornamental ceilings are 140 rare and magnificent minerals and gems from all over the world. The specimens were collected and bequeathed to UT by E.M. Barron, a former Texas legislator and World War II colonel from El Paso who turned his attention to minerals later in life as the founder of Southern Gem Mining Company. From a piece of delicate leaf gold from Nacozari once deemed the finest gold specimen from Mexico ever brought to the U.S. to a 925-carat blue topaz crystal that, in 1969, sat inside the Texas Capitol while the legislature voted to make blue topaz the official state gemstone, each piece in the collection is priceless. Even inside the dimly lit glass cases of the exhibition — sustained direct light can change their chemical nature — the gems glint and dazzle. These images, captured using a probe-lens to create a bug’s-eye view, unearth crystal faces and a depth of character from inside the rocks that is impossible to see with the naked eye, offering an unprecedented look at some of the university’s most shining treasures. — Sofia Sokolove